Showing headlines posted by Scott_Ruecker
« Previous ( 1 ... 1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 1179 1180 1181 ... 1217 ) Next »Chat with Mike Schroepfer This Friday
Asa Dotzler writes: "Mike Schroepfer is bringing back the wonderful developer chat series started by Chris Nelson of MozillaZine so many years ago, and inviting you all to join him for a Q&A and chat at 11am PDT Friday September 1, 2006 on irc.mozilla.org, channel #mozillazine.
Linux adds flexibility to "long-range" RFID readers
RFID specialist TagMaster used embedded Linux to build a new generation of "long-range and high-performance" 2.45 GHz RFID systems. The LR-xx readers operate in the license-free 2.45 GHz frequency band, and target applications in commercial and corporate parking areas, gated communities, university parking, airports, and hospitals, according to the company.
DIY Linux, the easy way
So you want a Linux that's set up with just the applications you want -- no more, no less. What do you do? Well, an expert Linux user does it himself. But, not everyone's a Linux legend. For the rest of us, there are two good choices.
FOSS facilitates communication for German fair trade co-op
Plattsalat is an organic and fair trade food cooperative in Stuttgart, Germany. Its members run the co-op, paying a monthly fee for the privilege of purchasing goods, making decisions, and participating in the work that goes into keeping a shop like Plattsalat running. But with 250 members, making sure everyone gets their say can get complicated. In order to disseminate information and facilitate communication, Plattsalat set up its own wiki. Board member Thomas Becker says open source software "fits our philosophy, political ideas, and our aims to change the world for the better."
Quickies: Okular, Desktop Survey, Krusader, Presidential Wedding
Ten days ago we got the first snapshot of KDE4. If you already played a bit with it, now you can continue discovering more interesting things playing with the unstable package of Okular, a universal document viewer for KDE4 based on the KPDF code.
Novell Reports Preliminary Financial Results for Third Fiscal Quarter 2006
Linux Platform Products revenue grows 30 percent year-over-year - Identity and Access Management revenue up 46 percent year-over-year - Announces voluntary stock-based compensation review.
Redefining Software Usage
This was a watershed year in the history of open source movement, particularly Linux, in India. This was not only because of large-scale enterprise deployments across many verticals, but also because Indian enterprise users seemed to finally comprehend the nuances of a subscription-based software adoption model.
Red Hat Exec: Hackers Still Important
Volunteer hackers still play an important role in open-source software development despite the many companies that pay developers to work on open-source products, according to Michael Tiemann, Red Hat’s vice president of open-source affairs.
Oracle Takes Another Page From Open Source
Oracle's latest Express database toolset version is still free -- as in free beer -- but takes even more inspiration from the free software movement, albeit with a few catches. The database giant is launching into wide release today the latest version of Application Express 2.2, its free tool for building Web apps from a browser.
Interview: Guy Martin of Motorola's Linux Division
Guy Martin is a distinguished member of technical staff within Motorola's Mobile Devices business. He helped establish opensource.motorola.com, and works with groups inside of Motorola to better interface with the Open Source community.
Sun releases open source single-sign-on code
Sun has officially released the source code to an identity management system under an open source license. Dubbed OpenSSO (Open Web Single Sign-On), the product is a suite of tools on which enterprises can build a unified authentication and session management framework to link disparate Web-based and Java-based applications.
Debian Weekly News - August 29th, 2006
Welcome to this year's 35th issue of DWN, the weekly newsletter for the Debian community. Bug squashing parties have been announced for September 8th to 10th in Vienna and for September 15th to 17th in Jülich, Germany. OSDir has taken screenshots of the new graphical Debian installer. Petr Stehlik reported that the installation of sarge and etch worked flawlessly in the recently fixed version of ARAnyM, a 32bit Atari ST/TT/Falconvirtual machine.
Getting to grips with Callisto
Eclipse is not just a Java IDE, it is a tools platform, which supports an increasing number of projects. The broad scope of these was apparent in Callisto, the code name for a set of simultaneous project releases earlier this summer.
Win4Lin adds Ubuntu support
Win4Lin Pro Desktop allows Linux users to run Windows applications on Linux while Win4Lin Virtual Desktop Server is an enterprise and SMB product for making Windows applications available to thin clients using a Linux server. The company says both products have been fully tested on Ubuntu 6.06.
OOoBasic crash course: Beautifying words and making them smarter
In a previous OOoBasic Crash Course article, we learned how to grab a current word and send it to an external application. Let's see what else we can do with a selected word.
Kace Launches Appliance for Remotely Deploying Windows and Linux
KACE has unveiled a line of appliances that streamlines the provisioning of Windows and Linux desktops and servers from a remote location. With the KBOX 2000 Series of appliances, administrators can install fresh operating systems, or recover old ones, from the comfort and safety of a Web browser.
Is Ubuntu Linux for You, Too?
Like cold fusion or a painless weight-loss plan, a user-friendly version of Linux remains elusive. But developers are getting closer with Ubuntu -- a free, Linux-based operating system that appeared in October 2004 and is winning over waves of converts, including high-profile geeks like Cory Doctorow.
Patent rulings could destroy open source software
US courts are endangering the very existence of free and open source software, according to a leading digital rights pressure group. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has asked the US Supreme Court to reverse lower courts' patent decisions.
Ncftp: Weapons-grade FTP on the Linux command line
It doesn’t matter how drag’n'drop GUI based FTP clients are, there comes a time when only the terminal will do. Certainly, at the least, for those times when X isn’t up.
African Wi-Fi hot spots come of age
Initially, paid-for Wi-Fi hot spots proved a difficult sell in developed countries. And in the more price-sensitive African markets they are often viewed as a luxury and have been very slow to take off.
« Previous ( 1 ... 1171 1172 1173 1174 1175 1176 1177 1178 1179 1180 1181 ... 1217 ) Next »